However, it is the premise of innovative educators like Peter Kline that each of us is an "everyday genius," that we have a great capacity to learn. The key to unlocking that capacity is to create an environment that supports discovery and allows us to enjoy learning because our natural talents are being used more successfully.
One of the best ways to understand how we learn is to observe infants and young children. Kline describes the process in this way:
Born with a mental structure that organizes the sounds of spoken words into complex grammatical forms, the child builds a language without anyone's instruction. All he needs is to listen to these sounds and then try them out...We came into the world instinctively prepared to do two things. One was to suck nourishment from our mother's breasts. To accomplish this we used our sucking instinct. The other was to do everything else. To accomplish this we used our learning instinct.
If we watch children interact with their world, their entire experience is one of learning-through tasting, smelling, crawling, handling, talking and listening. They are totally engaged in this exploring.
As we grow up and attend school, many of our ways of gathering information are taken away. We are told to sit still, be quiet, stop daydreaming, not to doodle and pay attention. For the child who learns best by moving around, we have taken away his or her primary mode of learning. For the interactive learner who needs to talk about ideas to understand them, we have taken away the ability to integrate information.
For the child who understands best by drawing diagrams and symbols, she or he loses that most vital tool. Although music is used to teach the ABC's in elementary school, it is considered too childish to use in the higher grades. Before we know it, learning becomes boring or school becomes a challenge to meet without our full sot of tools. The joy is gone.
School programs and educational techniques reflect our western values which elevate science, math, and logical achievement above success in the arts and human relations fields. Schools teach most effectively to those with strong language and logical thinking skills. If you were successful in school, you arc probably strong in these areas. Yet your learner may not be. 'Those who learn differently are often misunderstood, neglected, or undeserved by our educational systems.
Studios of the brain have shown that we need to move, sing, dance, draw, talk, and reflect to learn effectively. So the first thing we need to let go of is the expectation that there is one "right" way to learn or teach. Secondly, we need to let go of the expectation that our learners will be most successful if they use the same strategies that worked for us. Diversity is the key.
Studies of exceptional learners and "geniuses" have provided clues on how to improve our learning process. These findings have been used to develop strategies for successful learning. Research has shown that geniuses:
How do we create an environment that allows our "natural genius" to blossom? That is the challenge for both tutor and learner. One of the first things we can do is recognize our different ways of learning.